Answer:
Explanation:
The big question that the magistrate asked meursault finally was if he believed in God, to which he replied he didn't
Meursault prison cell looked tiny, dirty and unkempt, although it had the view of an ocean. And no, that's not what he expected.
The most difficult item for meursault to lose other than his freedom were his cigarettes and Marie
Having a memory is an advantage because it gave him the ability to think about the past, and that's a new thing for him
The first impression he had of the jury was that he were innocent. He then proceeded to describing them as strangers on a streetcar
The incident that occurred was the one in which he met someone unexpectedly at the funeral, and there, he felt as though he were a stranger
Answer:
disobey, not follow the rules, rebel
Explanation:
Answer:
Explanation:
If cinema didn't exist then the entire movie industry would not exist either, this meanst that we would not have Hollywood at all. Acting would not be a thing, and most likely television would not exist either. This means that there will most likely be another main form of entertainment and story telling through a different medium. Maybe through plays, video games, books etc. This new medium would be the new cinema and the entire industry will grow around it.
Answer:
The two ideas from the setting that influence the way characters act in this passage are:
B. the idea that people should not argue in public
E. the custom of saving women and children first
Explanation:
"A Night to Remember" is a novel by Walter Lord which gives an account of the disastrous first trip of the Titanic. As we know, the ship began its journey toward America but ended up sinking after a tragic collision with an iceberg in 1912.
The fact that the story is set in 1912 is of great importance to understand how and why the characters behave in certain ways. Society at the beginning of the 20th century lived under different, more strict, social rules than it does now. People would, for instance, avoid any sort of disagreement in public, since it was frowned upon. That is represented in the first fragment: "Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Meyer of New York felt so self-conscious arguing about it in public that they went down to their cabin."
It is also important to understand that, in sinking ships, it is a rule to save children and women first. The story being set on a ship explains the second fragment: "When they say ‘Women and children to the boats,’ you must go when your turn comes. I'll stay here with Jack Thayer. We’ll be all right.”